Author Topic: Media articles & stats / Tigers roar home over struggling Suns  (Read 438 times)

Offline one-eyed

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Tigers roar home over struggling Suns

Ben Collins 
afl.com.au
August 16, 2015 3:45 PM



RICHMOND         6.1   8.2   14.5   22.6 (138)
GOLD COAST     2.0   5.3     7.3     8.7 (55)

GOALS
Richmond: Vickery 4, Lloyd 3, Deledio 3, Martin 3, Lambert 2, Riewoldt 2, Grigg, Newman, Maric, Thomas, Ellis
Gold Coast: Lynch 3, Hall, Russell, Dixon, Garlett, Boston

BEST

Richmond: Martin, Lambert, Houli, Rance, Ellis, Maric, Vickery
Gold Coast:  Hall, Lynch, Kolodjashnij, Richchitelli, May, Lonergan

INJURIES
Richmond: Nil
Gold Coast: Nicholls (knee), Dixon (ankle), Martin (concussion)

SUBSTITUTES
Richmond: Kamdyn McIntosh replaced Anthony Miles in the fourth quarter
Gold Coast: Jarrod Garlett replaced Tom Nicholls at half-time

Reports: Nil

Umpires: Stevic, Brown, Mollison

Official crowd: 38,508 at the MCG

--------------------------------------------------------------

RICHMOND remains in the hunt for a top-four berth after recording an 83-point win over an injury-hit Gold Coast at the MCG on Sunday.

The Tigers overcame a mid-game lapse and a desperately low tackle count to establish a matchwinning break in the first term and ultimately cruise to a crucial percentage-boosting victory, 21.6 (132) to 8.7 (55).

After leading by 17 points at half-time, Richmond rattled on 14 goals to three to power away in the second half.

To steal the coveted double chance, the Tigers will likely need to win each of their three remaining games against Collingwood, Essendon and North Melbourne and hope other results fall their way.

Compounding matters for the Suns were two game-ending injuries that reduced them to just two men on the bench for the majority of the second half.

Ruckman Tom Nicholls was substituted out of the game at half-time with a potentially season-ending jarred knee, while promising midfielder Jack Martin was stretchered off after being knocked out in a head clash with Richmond captain Trent Cotchin early in the third quarter.

Gold Coast was down a further rotation when key forward Charlie Dixon sat out the last 10 minutes after battling manfully with a right ankle problem.

Richmond star Brett Deledio, with three goals, was a beacon amid some unattractive play – the Tigers have now won 11 of the 14 games he has played this season, but just one of the five he has missed.

Deledio was one of six multiple goalkickers for the Tigers, including midfielders Dustin Martin and Kane Lambert, who were pivotal playmakers, particularly when the contest was hot.

Richmond was also superbly served by attacking backmen Bachar Houli and Alex Rance, the latter having the better of his duel with Dixon.

With Suns defender Steven May restricting Jack Riewoldt to just two goals, Tigers big man Ty Vickery helped set up the game with three first-half goals, and four for the match.

At the other end, in-form Suns forward Tom Lynch spoiled his good work with poor conversion, tallying 3.3 and missing three shots he would normally nail.

Gold Coast midfielder Aaron Hall was proactive and creative with his running and ball use, with solid support from acting skipper Michael Rischitelli, while Kade Kolodjashnij was typically composed across half-back.

http://www.afl.com.au/news/2015-08-16/match-report-richmond-v-gold-coast

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Media articles & stats / Tigers roar home over struggling Suns
« Reply #1 on: August 17, 2015, 02:36:17 AM »
Talking points: Richmond v Gold Coast

Nat Edwards 
afl.com.au
August 16, 2015 4:08 PM


1. Bruise-free Tigers
The Tigers applied scoreboard pressure to the Suns in the opening term, but they certainly didn't put much pressure on the ball carrier. Richmond registered just one tackle for the quarter (through Dustin Martin), to the Suns' 15. Richmond's first-quarter tackle count set a new season low, 'beating' the Bulldogs' total of four (also in the opening term) tackles against the Saints in round 13. By half-time, the Tigers' count had increased to nine, while the Suns were up to 40 tackles with Touk Miller and Harley Bennell recording 10 between them. Coming into Sunday, the Tigers averaged 59 tackles per game in 2015, but finished the match with 30 to the Suns' 61. While it didn't have an effect on the end result of the game, it is a small concern for a team hoping to make splash in the finals series.


5. Richmond boosts percentage

The Tigers' 83-point win over Gold Coast is their biggest victory over Gold Coast. In fact, it was just the second time Richmond has beaten the Suns in five meetings. The win takes the Tigers to 12-7 for the season and moves them up the ladder into sixth place. The big win boosted their percentage from 108.9 to 114.5, which could become very important with the race for the final place in the top four still up for grabs.

http://www.afl.com.au/news/2015-08-16/five-talking-points-richmond-v-gold-coast

Offline one-eyed

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Tigers thump Suns for home final box seat (Herald-Sun)
« Reply #2 on: August 17, 2015, 02:41:41 AM »
Tigers thump Suns for home final box seat

Bruce Matthews
Herald-Sun
August 17, 2015



BRETT Deledio didn’t really need the bright lime boots for I’m-back emphasis at the MCG today.

Deledio’s sublime skills and clean finishing instantly added another dimension to Richmond, particularly up forward.

That ability to play small and tall not only netted three goals, but set up others as the Tigers rebounded with purpose for a thumping 83-point win against an understaffed Gold Coast.

Whether on the lead or overhead, the 228-games ace always looked a threat inside the forward 50 as he worked instinctively with Jack Riewoldt.

In a contest when the Tigers were supposedly exposed as the overwhelming favourite, they never looked likely to surrender an early lead and simply kept building on it for a late-season percentage boost.

At times, it was even that old-style high balls up forward that keep the scoreboard ticking over. Long bombs, particularly in the third quarter, allowed Ty Vickery and Riewoldt to run and jump at the marking contests. But it was ruckman Ivan Maric who upstaged them with a strong grab in a pack late in that six-goal spree.

Gold Coast was always going to struggle when No. 1 ruckman Tom Nicholls had to be subbed out at halftime after injuring a knee late in the second quarter.

The Suns were already in trouble at the centre bounces and stoppages and this time Tiger Dustin Martin ignited after a modest first half.

His goal from a stoppage in the opening minute of the second half sparked a Richmond surge. Six straight goals in 19 minutes and the contest was over.

Worse was to follow for the struggling Suns when play had to be stopped while forward Jack Martin was removed on a stretcher following a head clash with Tiger Trent Cotchin when the pair dived for a loose ball.

And the Suns were effectively left with one fit player on the bench with key forward Charlie Dixon’s movement clearly hampered by an ankle injury early in the second term.

It didn’t take long for the Riewoldt-Deledio partnership up forward to start paying its way.

Each goalled in the opening quarter courtesy of pinpoint passes from the other in a lively start for the Tigers.

Richmond derived damaging run out of the backline from dashing Bachar Houli who hurt Gold Coast on the turnovers.

His rebound was controlled when the Suns manned him up after quarter-time, but the bearded backman had played a significant part in the Tigers’ six-goals opening.

Richmond relied heavily on Gold Coast mistakes to create space from the turnover, although the Suns were harder at the contests when the game was alive in the first half.

A staggering stat to illustrate the Tigers’ lack of pressure on the ball-carrier was their lone tackle compared to Gold Coast’s 15 in the first term. It was rectified once coach Damien Hardwick summoned the group around him at quarter time.

It had been Richmond’s efficiency advantage and ability to hit the scoreboard, either with marks inside 50 or crumbing opportunities, like Sam Lloyd’s three goals, that illustrated the vast gulf between the combatants. And that slender halftime buffer just kept blowing out in the one-sided second half.

RICHMOND 6.1 8.2 14.5 22.6 (138)

def

GOLD COAST SUNS 2.0 5.3 7.3 8.7 (55)

BEST

Richmond: Martin, Lambert, Houli, Vickery, Ellis, Grigg, Cotchin, Rance

Gold Coast: A Hall, Kolodjashnij, May, Lonergan, Rischitelli, Bennell

GOALS

Richmond: T Vickery 4, D Martin B. Deledio S. Lloyd 3, K. Lambert J. Riewoldt 2, B. Ellis S. Grigg M. Thomas C. Newman I. Maric 1

Gold Coast: TJ Lynch 3, A. Hall L. Russell A. Boston C. Dixon J. Garlett 1

INJURIES

Richmond: Nil

Gold Coast: Nicholls (knee), Martin (concussion), Dixon (ankle)

VOTES

3. Dustin Martin (Richmond)

2. Kane Lambert (Richmond)

1. Bachar Houli (Richmond)


http://www.news.com.au/sport/afl/afl-2015-richmond-defeat-gold-coast-suns-by-83-points-at-mcg-in-round-20/story-fnelctok-1227485718644

Offline one-eyed

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Richmond in cruise control against Gold Coast (Age)
« Reply #3 on: August 17, 2015, 02:45:25 AM »
Richmond in cruise control against Gold Coast Suns

   Matt Murnane
     The Age
    August 17, 2015


RICHMOND     6.1  8.2  14.5  22.6 (138)
GOLD COAST 2.0  5.3   7.3     8.7 (55)

Goals:
Richmond: T Vickery 4 B Deledio 3 D Martin 3 S Lloyd 3 J Riewoldt 2 K Lambert 2 B Ellis C Newman I Maric M Thomas S Grigg.
Gold Coast: T Lynch 3 A Boston A Hall C Dixon J Garlett L Russell.

Best:
Richmond: Lambert, Martin, Rance, Cotchin, Ellis, Vickery.
Gold Coast: May, Hall, Lynch, Kolodjashnij, Richchitelli.

Umpires: Matt Stevic, Jacob Mollison, Nick Brown.
Official Crowd: 38,508 at MCG.

-----------------------------------------------------------------

Having buried their Gold Coast hoodoo as expected, Richmond are now officially September-bound after Sunday's game at the MCG.

For a few Tigers on the fringe of selection, this was a chance to lay claim to a spot for what is shaping as an exciting finals series for their success-starved fan base.

It was a chance Kane Lambert wasn't going to let slip.

The 23-year-old, who had been overlooked for five national drafts before arriving at Punt Road (in 2010 he gave up on football and didn't nominate), has worked harder than most to earn his chance in the spotlight and, on Sunday against the Suns, showed he's prepared to work even harder to keep it.
Jack Martin was stretchered from the ground, suffering a sickening third-term concussion.

Jack Martin was stretchered from the ground, suffering a sickening third-term concussion. Photo: Getty Images

The tough midfielder finished with 27 disposals, six inside 50s, five clearances and two goals in a display coach Damien Hardwick rated as his best since joining the club.

In fact, if you stopped the game at three-quarter-time – and from a spectacle standpoint you so easily could have – Lambert was probably the most influential player on the ground.

"I thought he was very clean, his ability to find the ball and then use it was a real positive for us," Hardwick said of Lambert after the match.

"We all know his story. He's taken a little bit of time to get here but he doesn't look out of place."

Having suffered a nasty shoulder injury during his debut against the Western Bulldogs – and considering all the other knock-backs along the way – one could have forgiven Lambert for thinking maybe he was not going to make an impact in the AFL..

But his never-give-up attitude has paid off, driving him to regain a spot back in round 13 and it was obvious in everything he did against the Suns, such as his brave back-with-the-flight mark and goal in the last quarter when the game was long over. 

"It's a real credit to him," Hardwick said.

"He works incredibly hard and the upside for us is that he's still got some areas of improvement that could take him to a new level as a player."

In a different way, and not on the same scale, it was a similar type of day for team-mates Ty Vickery and Sam Lloyd.

Having been the substitute and then substituted in his past two matches, Lloyd would have known the importance of sticking his hand up for September on a day when Jack Riewoldt was well held by Steven May, and his three goals and 16 disposals surely did that.

The same goes for Vickery, who went for a game-high four goals all from marks inside 50, and had a clever hand in two others – one from a hit-out deep inside 50, and another from a unselfish tap on in the goal square to Riewoldt.

There was a time this season were some thought the Tigers were going in a different direction to Vickery, but the former No.8 pick has come on strong since forcing his way back into the team in round 18, and this effort must give him confidence.

The Tigers showed no mercy on the Suns once it became apparent they had the result locked, running out with 14 goals in the first half to punctuate a dominate 22-goal offensive display that featured many of the "A Team" — Dustin Martin (29 disposals, three goals), Brandon Ellis (29 disposals, five inside 50s), Trent Cotchin (28 disposals, nine clearances) and Brett Deledio (three goals) — running riot at the end. 

This was not unsurprising on two fronts, firstly because percentage could become crucial in a few weeks time and secondly, because they owe the Suns some misery – the thoughts of three surprise losses to the franchise team in their formative years still fresh in mind.

We knew the Suns were out-classed coming in, but by five minutes into the third-quarter, they were also out-manned.

Any hope the Suns might have had after key forward Tom Lynch kicked a goal after the half-time siren to bring Gold Coast to within just 17 points quickly evaporated when ruckman Tom Nicholls was subbed out with a knee injury.

That meant Lynch, who was brave all day with three goals and 11 marks, had to spend more time in the ruck, robbing Rodney Eade of one his best forwards for key stages of the second half.

Their other key forward, Charlie Dixon, was already hobbled with a bad ankle and that only exacerbated the fact he was getting soundly beaten by Alex Rance, who had another of his signature games (24 disposals, nine marks) patrolling half-back - blanketing forward entries and then bouncing the other way.

Shortly after Nicholls went out, Jack Martin came off second best in a nasty head clash with Cotchin, leaving the Suns another man down as he was stretchered off.

By the end of it, there was not much Eade, nor his players, could do to stop the onslaught. The Suns probably can't wait for 2015 to be over. For the Tigers – and perhaps a few like Lambert, Vickery and Lloyd — this could just be the start.

http://www.theage.com.au/afl/afl-match-report/richmond-in-cruise-control-against-gold-coast-suns-20150816-gj06sg.html